Some anatomical considerations of meningitis.
The pia is closely applied to the surface of the brain, dipping down into all the fissures, both major and minor. The arachnoid is only reflected into the greater fissures—the mesial longitudinal fissure, the fissure of Sylvius, Rolando, &c. The pia and arachnoid are therefore separated from one another by a potential space over the convolutions themselves, and by an actual space in the region of many of the cortical fissures.
On the under aspect of the brain the two membranes are so disposed and so separated from one another as to form three great basins or cisternæ, three great spaces acting as a water-bed for the brain. These are the cisterna magna, the arachnoid bridging over the wide interval between the back part of the under surface of the cerebellum and the medulla, the cisterna pontis, the angular space between the pons, medulla, and cerebellum, and the cisterna basalis, the arachnoid there covering in the structure situated in the interpeduncular space, including the Circle of Willis.
The subarachnoid space, both cortical and basal, is traversed by numerous trabeculæ which, passing from one membrane to the other, break up the space into innumerable small compartments, all containing cerebro-spinal fluid and all intercommunicating. The cerebral vessels ramify in the space, the tributaries being supported by the framework and bathed in the fluid.
All cranial nerves carry with them in their emergence from the skull a process of both pia and arachnoid, variable in extent, but so arranged that the nerve trunk is surrounded for some distance by a funnel-shaped process of membrane, the cerebral cerebro-spinal fluid being thus brought into connexion with the cervical lymphatic spaces.
With respect to the origin of the cerebro-spinal fluid and its wave of flow, the researches of Leonard Hill tend to prove that it is formed from the lining ependyma and choroid plexuses of the three main ventricles of the brain, passing thence into the spinal cerebro-spinal region and, by means of the foramina of Majendie, Key, and Retzius—apertures in the roof of the fourth ventricle—on to the surface of the brain. From this latter region there appears to be a general tendency for the fluid to pass upwards from the basal aspect of the brain towards the superior longitudinal sinus where it is again absorbed, probably through the medium of the Pacchionian bodies and lacunæ laterales of the venous sinus.
Fig. 84. Basal Meningitis secondary to Temporo-sphenoidal Abscess.
From these few anatomical facts it is manifest (1) that a subarachnoid purulent effusion has every opportunity of spreading widely over the surface of the brain, and (2) that inflammation and its results in the immediate neighbourhood of the roof of the fourth ventricle will tend to impede the normal flow of cerebro-spinal fluid through the foramina in that region, thus inducing a degree of internal hydrocephalus directly proportionate to the degree of obstruction.
Furthermore, it is obvious that the anatomical arrangements are entirely opposed to the possibility of providing adequate drainage in cases of general meningeal infection. It has been suggested that trephine holes should be made on either side of the skull, and that the intervening meningeal space should be washed out between the two apertures. It is, however, impossible to attain such a result, not only because of the futility of attempting to wash through the subarachnoid meshwork, but also on account of the outward bulging of the brain substance through the trephine holes and the corking up of those apertures.